The Bootlegger (Isaac Bell 7)
“Ever been to Detroit?”
“Detroit? What the deuce is in Detroit, except a bunch of automobiles?”
“Bootleggers,” said Bell. “The place is crawling with them.”
“Shore. Because it’s one mile from Canada. What’s that got to do with me?”
Bell looked Hatfield in the eye and said, “Walt, I just got word they’ve corrupted our Detroit field office from top to bottom. Our boys are taking payoffs to ride shotgun on liquor runs and shaking down the bellhop
s.”
“Our boys?” the Texan asked with a wintery scowl. “Are you sure, Isaac?”
“I don’t know who’s still on the square. I want you to pay them a visit.”
Walt strode directly to the hatcheck, threw down a quarter, and clapped his J. B. Stetson on his head. Bell intercepted him at the front door.
“Here’s your train ticket. I booked a stateroom on the Detroiter.”
“Ah can afford my own stateroom ticket.”
“Not on a detective’s salary, you can’t. Wire me tomorrow.”
• • •
A CABLE WAS WAITING for Isaac Bell in the New York field office, which was three blocks down Fifth Avenue from the Plaza, on the second floor of the St. Regis Hotel.
PARIS CHIEF WOUNDED.
PRIVATE MATTER.
WIFE NOT HIS.
COVERING.
ARCHIE
Bell crumpled it in his fist. He had been counting on his best friend, Archibald Angell Abbott IV, to come back from Europe, where Van Dorn had sent him to reinvigorate the Paris, Rome, and London offices. This meant he had to find another right-hand man to help him straighten out the agency. McKinney was busy ramrodding the New York office. Harry Warren was busy with the Gang Squad, and, even if he weren’t, a detective who knew every gangster in New York hadn’t the national knowledge Bell needed. Nor did Scudder Smith. Tim Holian, out in Los Angeles, and Horace Bronson, back from Paris to his old post in San Francisco, were needed there to hold down the western states.
“Where’s Dashwood?”
“He’s at the rifle range, Mr. Bell.”
Bell walked quickly up Park Avenue to the Seventh Regiment Armory and down into the basement. The sharpshooters and marksmen of the regiment’s crack shooting team were practicing for a match in the double-decked rifle range. He waited behind the firing line, breathing in the lively scent of smokeless powder, until the clatter of .22s ceased. Targets were snaked in. The riflemen inspected them, then passed them to the range captain.
The range captain compared them for the tightest patterns around the bull’s-eyes and held up the winner’s target. In the center of the black eye was a hole so clean it might have been cut by folding the paper in two and cutting a tiny half-moon with scissors. “Number 14? Number 14? Where are you, sir?”
Detective James Dashwood descended from the upper deck. He looked paler than ever, Bell thought. His skin was dead white, and he was thin to the point of gaunt. His suit hung loosely on his frame.
“Of course,” said the range captain. “I should have guessed. Gentlemen, meet former lieutenant James Dashwood.”
The name drew respectful murmurs from the marksmen and sharpshooters. His service as an American Expeditionary Forces sniper in the trenches was legend.
“James,” the captain asked with a knowing smile. “Would you please show them your ‘rifle.’”
Dashwood gave a diffident shrug. He had a boyish voice. “That’s O.K., Captain.”
“Please, James. Your ‘rifle.’”